This tracker is based on public legislative materials from Congress.gov, the U.S. Senate, and the U.S. House. It combines sourced status checks with limited analysis about what readers should watch next.
Rescheduling and Administrative Action
The administrative rescheduling process remains separate from congressional legislation. Public rulemaking steps can move on a different timeline than statutory reform bills, so readers should not assume that agency action resolves the broader federal reform debate.
Banking and Tax Relief
Banking and tax bills continue to depend on committee calendars, leadership priorities, and negotiation over compliance guardrails. The relevant question is not whether proposals exist, but whether they are moving through chambers in a way that can be verified through public legislative records.
Expungement and Social Equity
Several proposals continue to pair decriminalization with expungement, reinvestment, or social-equity provisions. The public record supports continued interest in those approaches, but timelines remain uncertain unless and until leadership schedules the necessary committee and floor activity.
What To Watch Next
Readers should watch committee notices, agency filings, and leadership scheduling updates rather than relying on generalized reform momentum. This piece is intended as legislative context and analysis of public records, not a prediction that any one bill is on the verge of passage.
